State v. Chris Hollins, in His Official Capacity as Harris County Clerk

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 2020
Docket20-0729
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Chris Hollins, in His Official Capacity as Harris County Clerk (State v. Chris Hollins, in His Official Capacity as Harris County Clerk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Chris Hollins, in His Official Capacity as Harris County Clerk, (Tex. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ════════════ NO. 20-0729 ════════════

THE STATE OF TEXAS, PETITIONER, v.

CHRIS HOLLINS, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS HARRIS COUNTY CLERK, RESPONDENT

════════════════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS ════════════════════════════════════════════════════

Argued September 30, 2020

PER CURIAM

Voting by mail in Texas is limited by statute to certain groups. 1 To obtain a mail-in ballot,

a registered voter must assert eligibility on an application form that meets statutory requirements. 2

Election officials must make a form application produced by the Secretary of State available to

voters. 3 The Harris County Clerk proposes to mail unsolicited ballot applications to all registered

voters under 65 years of age, only a fraction of whom are eligible to vote by mail. Because no

other election official in Texas is doing or has ever done what the Clerk proposes, his plan threatens

to undermine the statutorily required uniform operation of election laws across the state. The State

1 TEX. ELEC. CODE §§ 82.001–.004, 82.007. Every reference to a statutory section in this opinion is to the Election Code unless otherwise noted. 2 §§ 84.001(a), 84.002. 3 §§ 1.010(a), 84.012. contends that such a mass mailing is not authorized by the Election Code. The Code contains no

express authority. The issue before us is whether authority is implied.

Whether voting by mail should be restricted has been a subject of intense political debate,

in this State and throughout the country. For more than a century, the Texas Legislature “has been

both engaged and cautious in allowing voting by mail.” 4 There are concerns that mail-in ballots

can be marked fraudulently without the voters’ knowledge or consent and “harvested”—returned

by someone else, sometimes in bulk. There are countervailing concerns that requiring in-person

voting discourages some from participating who otherwise would because it is harder and,

especially in the current pandemic environment, not as safe. We, of course, take no side in these

policy debates, which we leave to legislators and others. The question before us is not whether

voting by mail is good policy or not, but what policy the Legislature has enacted. It is purely a

question of law.

We conclude that the Election Code does not authorize the mailing proposed by the Harris

County Clerk. Accordingly, we grant the State’s petition for review, reverse the court of appeals’

judgment, and remand the case to the trial court to issue a temporary injunction prohibiting the

Harris County Clerk from mass-mailing unsolicited ballot applications to voters.

I

A

Statewide Texas elections are administered by county officials. Texas has 254 counties,

more than any other state. They range in population from 134 people to over 4 million and in size

4 In re State, 602 S.W.3d 549, 558 (Tex. 2020). 2 from 149 square miles to over 6,000. Texas counties are “legal subdivisions of the State”, 5

“subordinate and derivative branch[es] of state government” 6 that “represent no sovereignty

distinct from the state and possess only such powers and privileges as have been expressly or

impliedly conferred upon them.” 7 Before a county official can take “any action,” that action’s

“legal basis . . . must be grounded ultimately in the constitution or statutes.” 8

Texas has more than 16 million registered voters, some 2.4 million of whom reside in

Harris County. Given the massive scale of Texas’ elections and the variety of locations in which

they take place, the Texas Legislature has prescribed in its lengthy, detailed, and comprehensive

Election Code how elections must be conducted. The Secretary of State is charged with

“obtain[ing] and maintain[ing] uniformity in the application, operation, and interpretation” of the

Code’s provisions. 9

The Legislature has made only five categories of voters eligible to vote by mail: those who

expect to be absent from the county during the voting period, 10 those with a “disability” as defined

by Section 82.002 and our decision in In re State, 11 those who will be 65 or older on election day,12

5 TEX. CONST. art. XI, § 1. 6 Avery v. Midland County, 406 S.W.2d 422, 426 (Tex. 1966), vacated on other grounds, 390 U.S. 474 (1968). 7 Wasson Interests, Ltd. v. City of Jacksonville, 489 S.W.3d 427, 430 (Tex. 2016) (quoting Payne v. Massey, 196 S.W.2d 493, 495 (Tex. 1946)). 8 Guynes v. Galveston County, 861 S.W.2d 861, 863 (Tex. 1993) (citation omitted). 9 § 31.003. 10 § 82.001. 11 602 S.W.3d 549, 559–560 (Tex. 2020). 12 § 82.003. 3 those confined in jail at the time their application is submitted, 13 and crime victims whose

addresses are confidential by law. 14 According to a printout in the record from the U.S. Census

Bureau, only about 10.9% of Harris County’s population is 65 or older. The parties dispute the

percentage of voters who may have a disability, but the record reflects that for elections occurring

since 2016, between 0.8% and 2.6% of voters who requested mail-in ballot applications marked a

disability as their reason for doing so.

B

Before a primary runoff election held this July, the Harris County Clerk, Chris Hollins,

sent an application to vote by mail to every registered voter in Harris County 65 years of age or

older, all of whom were eligible to vote by mail. 15 On August 25, Hollins announced via Twitter

that he would soon send an application to every registered voter in the county under age 65, even

though only a small percentage would be eligible to vote by mail under the Election Code.

Two days after Hollins’ Twitter announcement, on August 27, the Director of Elections for

the Texas Secretary of State, Keith Ingram, sent a letter demanding that Hollins “immediately halt”

his plan. Ingram asserted that Hollins’ plan “would be contrary to [the Secretary of State’s]

guidance”; “[would] confuse voters about their ability to vote by mail”; and “could impede the

ability of persons who need to vote by mail to do so” by “[c]logging up the vote by mail

infrastructure with potentially millions of applications from persons who do not qualify”. Ingram

13 § 82.004. 14 § 82.007. 15 See § 82.003 (“A qualified voter is eligible for early voting by mail if the voter is 65 years of age or older on election day.”). The State did not challenge this mailing, and its legality is not before us. 4 gave Hollins until noon on August 31 to announce the retraction of his plan. When Hollins refused,

this lawsuit ensued.

The State sued Hollins in his official capacity, alleging that mass mailing applications

would be an ultra vires action because the Election Code does not authorize an early voting clerk

to send applications to voters who do not affirmatively request one. The litigation has been

expedited at every level. The parties immediately entered into a Rule 11 agreement 16 that

(i) Hollins would not send applications to voters under 65 until five days after the trial court ruled

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